*** Resumes: A Waste of Time?
Legacy signals
Legacy popularity: 1,130 legacy views
It is well known that 80% of jobs are not advertised yet job hunters still focus on the 20% that are. For the jobs that aren’t advertised – that is, aren’t on job sites, in the papers or posted with recruiters, you need to network – that is, make contacts that can get you in front of the employer. Most times the employer hires you based on the quality of the referral and your performance in an interview not the beauty of your CV. The resume may not even be a factor or at a minor one in the job-hiring decision. Yet job hunters still obsess about getting the perfect resume. It’s often misspent time and unnecessary stress.
So is my advice that you should forget about a resume?
Yes and no.
Yes! I definitely don’t think that you should spend more time on your resume than you do on networking. And on relationships – both establishing new ones and deepening existing ones. You need to network strategically, consistently and extensively to find contacts that can get you to the jobs that aren’t advertised.
No! But I do think, paradoxically that time spent on the resume can be invaluable as a tool for focusing your job hunt or career change. Now let’s say that again. Time spent on your resume can be great for focus. Yep, it acts as a planning tool. Of course it won’t harm you or stop you getting a job but the main benefits of creating a good resume are to understand your past and how that supports future.
Understanding your past? What have you done in your work life and in your personal life? What knowledge, skills, experience and motivations have you shown? What is your story? What were the steps (and maybe missteps) that shaped your career?
And supporting your future. What accomplishments, qualifications and experiences would support your next step in your work life? Now your next step could be: more of the same – you like your current job and industry and you want a similar position; the next level – you are ready to move up the ladder or deepen your expertise; and you’ve had it – you don’t like your job or industry or it’s changed so much that jobs don’t exist so you’re ready for something different. And which elements of your past life don’t support your future plans and how can you present them and be prepared for them in an interview. The missing job history, the lack of relevant experience or the required qualification that is not part of your educational background are all examples of the barriers that can hurt the job hunter. Having thought through your resume and crafted a good one will surface those issues and help you come up with explanations and deflections to achieve your career goals.
Working through your past and mapping it to your future helps you focus your career strategy so when you do your networking you can easily talk about what you want and why the employer should give it to you!
So, resumes may not be your key tool in finding a job but they are definitely a key tool in determining your focus. So resumes aren’t a waste of time for your career strategy but maybe for your job hunt!
Article author
About the Author
Further reading
Further Reading
Article
Get A Life Not Just A Job
Before you consider your next job change or even career change, it's crucial that you look at the kind of lifestyle you want today and in the future. This career-planning time is also time to think about life planning. When I meet with my clients for the first time, before I ask them what they want to do, I ask them what kind of life they want to live. Even in carefree Hawaii, there's an expression Pau Hana--meaning after work. Until the last decade, most of our lives were built around work and after work.
Related piece
Article
Attracting the Right Place to Live Your Life of Attraction
WHAT IF YOU COULD MANIFEST THE PERFECT PLACE TO LIVE ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD? What if you could live in sunny Hawaii in winter and cool San Francisco in hot summer! What if you could live in a mansion when you're now making do in a log cabin? What if you could move to the beach next week when you're in a skyscraper in Tokyo today. YOU CAN DO IT -- you can create the life of your vision and dreams! Where you live need not be driven by career choice, but by personal decision.
Related piece
Article
Change Your Mind, Change Your Life
GET A LIFE, NOT JUST ANOTHER JOB YES, you can change your life-- just create a vision and change your mind! With coaching, a great Vision Board and a new path lined up -- you can create the life of your dreams for you AND your family. Joyce Schwarz has worked with more than 10,000 people to assure that they are living the law of attraction and manifesting their life's dreams and visions. HERE ARE SOME EXAMPLES.
Related piece
Article
Top Ten Strategies for Becoming Uncommonly Successful
You can shorten your learning curve by learning from the best. To help you do just that, here are 10 of 26 proven strategies gleaned from interviews with highly successful people who have overcome obstacles to accomplish such feats at climbing Mt. Everest, winning a Grammy, becoming an ...
Related piece